Month: June 2024

Community Poem May 2024

Stick it in the fuck it bucket

We’re 8 people sat on a boat,
human connection is rare and very needed today, I received it
here.
Alarmingly dysfunctional,
I can only just hold conversations with people that are as
socially inept as I am.
Henry sucky so good,
I’m a psychoactive toad baby, lick me all over and see infinity.
Elizabeth whiskers the tuxedo cat,
but Pablo stole the show-
If all the world’s a stage what did they build this stage for?
Tiny terrapin laughs at the pink moon.
Cortisol and hormones flood my mind, intoxicating blend of work
and age and busy brain, exploding in productivity-
5-7-5 right?
Was that enough syllables?
Fuck it, never mind.
Stick it in the fuck it bucket!
Ho you can court me in my pantoum.
My humps, my humps, my humpy humpy humps,
check it out.
I like flowers
they look cool.
Sick sleazy silk socks eat;
but the other way around.
I eat black holes for breakfast,
sausage a plenty,
discarded apple core,
a porridge-thick sickly sticking-
For the love of cider!
There’s always free cheddar in the mousetrap – Tom waits.
Satellite of Love
No trigger warnings for you
you only bring joy.

You know it’s bad when you consider turning to religion…

Home » Archives for June 2024

JLM Morton 24th July 2024 Red Handed Book Launch

JLM Morton is a writer and poet whose work explores contemporary rural experience and belonging, ancestry, place and practices of care, repair and solidarity across human and other-than-human worlds. Winner of the Laurie Lee, Geoffrey Dearmer, Gloucestershire Wildlife Trust Poetry and International Dylan Thomas Day prizes, her work is published widely including in The Poetry ReviewThe Rialto, Magma, Poetry Birmingham, Places of Poetry, Sunday Telegraph and in the ethnography Living With Water (Manchester University Press, 2023). In 2023 she was longlisted for the Nan Shepherd Prize. Her first full poetry collection Red Handed is forthcoming with Broken Sleep Books (May, 2024).  She’s poet in residence this year at Sladebank Woods near Stroud, a semi-urban woodland located between a housing estate and an AONB. Find her online at: jlmmorton.com

RED HANDED explores England’s rural textile heritage with a decolonising lens, picking apart the global threads and entanglements that were created and enforced by British colonial rule. JLM Morton explores ways of coming to terms with this legacy and how belonging might be found in the ruins. A long poem, ‘Sentient’ forms part two of the collection, cultivating close attention to the minutiae of the land, to the hedgerow as cultural memory and a preoccupation with the unnoticed and the overlooked. Sentient is a bearing witness, an observation of survival and an invocation to the world around us to persist in the face of climate catastrophe. In the final part of the collection, the poems explore an intimate attachment to place that reaches back to the deep time of an ancient Celtic past and finds forgotten indigenous women’s rites and rituals embodied in the hills, commons and waterways of home.

Praise for JLM’s work

Lalline Paul – ‘‘The literary daughter of Alan Garner – female psychogeography, a rallying call to protect not only the land, but our right to roam.’

Nan Shepherd Prize judging panel – ‘spot on nature writing.’

Red Handed – ‘a stunning debut’ (Monique Roffey), ‘an incredible book’ (Pascale Petit), ‘original, evocative and assured’ (Martha Sprackland).


JLM Morton has also selected two additional poets to perform at this event.

Caleb Parkin

Caleb Parkin, Bristol City Poet 2020 – 22, has poems are in The Guardian, The Rialto, The Poetry Review and was guest poet on BBC Radio 4’s Poetry Please. He has three pamphlets, his debut collection, This Fruiting Body (Nine Arches) was longlisted for the Laurel Prize and second collection, Mingle, is due October 2024. He tutors widely, holds an MSc Creative Writing for Therapeutic Purposes and is a practice-based PhD researcher at University of Exeter.

Sophie Dumont

Sophie is a Bristol-based poet and copywriter for two charities providing learning opportunities for young people with special educational needs and disabilities. Her poems have been published widely, including in The Rialto, Ink Sweat and Tears and Magma. Her poetry won the Brian Dempsey Memorial Prize and she’s working on her debut collection about her experience as a kayaker and the shitty state of UK rivers. Sophie’s held writing residencies on Bristol Harbourside with Boat Poets and at Exeter Custom House with Literature Works. Learn more over at sophiedumont.co.uk